Jelly Roll - Beautifully Broken (zip 2024) {Album Rar Mp3} +Download

10 October 2024

Views: 396

Jelly Roll Beautifully Broken rar Full Album leak MEGA zip mp3 320 kbps m4a Mediafire Torrent

L!NK-⏩⏩ https://goo.su/NLyNktI

TRACKLIST:

01 Winning Streak
02 Burning
03 Heart of Stone
04 I Am Not Okay
05 When The Drugs Don’t Work
06 Higher Than Heaven
07 Liar
08 Everyone Bleeds
09 Get By
10 Unpretty
11 Grace
12 What It Takes
13 Hey Mama
14 Time of Day
15 Born Again
16 Guilty
17 Little Light
18 Hear Me Out
19 Woman
20 Smile So Much
21 My Cross
22 What’s Wrong With Me

Just past the halfway mark on country artist Jelly Roll’s new 22-track album lies a sequence of songs in which he grapples with his celebrity. They offer sagas of homesickness for Tennessee while he’s out on the road “doin’ what I gotta”, and of friends who suggest fame has changed the man born Jason Bradley DeFord. “The old me’s not the new me, but the old me’s still inside,” he protests. The songs sometimes swagger, as you might expect: now 39, Jelly Roll has escaped a life of poverty, addiction and criminality (“born in the struggle” as he puts it) and now finds himself being profiled by Jon Bon Jovi in Interview magazine. “Ain’t no climb that’s ever too steep,” he avers, “waters rise but they’re never too deep.” Equally, his lyrics occasionally hint at the odd tussle with impostor syndrome – “I don’t think I deserve the time of day” – but ultimately conclude that the good outweighs the bad: “These roads got their twists and turns,” he sings on Hey Mama, “but I damn sure love it.”

This is nothing we haven’t heard before from the newly famous, but you can forgive DeFord for dwelling on the subject. Before his 2020 track Save Me propelled him into the spotlight, he had spent more than 15 years on the margins, a white Nashville MC hustling CD-R mixtapes and self-released collaborative albums (so many that Beautifully Broken counts as something like his 39th full-length release). It was an artistic environment vaguely adjacent to the country-rap scene depicted in a 2018 Rolling Stone feature: a largely hidden world of festivals held at Georgia mud bogs, where Maga politics predominate and CD sales outstrip Spotify figures because many fans live so rurally that their internet connections can’t handle streaming. This scene, the article concluded, is likely to stay hidden – the implication being that it is just too unapologetically redneck for any of its artists to find mass acceptance.

Share